Tuesday, August 12, 2025

#448---LA @ COL, 4/1/2021


If you follow the progression of my scorekeeping style over time, you will see that my early scoresheets (late ‘90s/early ‘00s) have a lot more notes scrawled on the page then my later efforts. Some of this was due to my notation evolving to allow information to be recorded more effectively (for example, early scoresheets have notes indicating on what pitch events like steals or wild pitches occurred, which I later captured in the scorebox more efficiently), but in general after scoring literally thousands of games there is less that I find so noteworthy that it needs to be specially recorded. Sometimes you can’t help it though, and the Dodgers’ third is a good example. Cody Bellinger hit a fly to the warning track in left that bounced off Raimel Tapia’s glove and over the wall, but Justin Turner who had started from first and rounded second thought Tapia had caught it and ran back towards first, being passed by Bellinger in the process. The notation (Bellinger single to wall in left and out “PR4” – passed runner with putout credited to second base) and) gives some indication, but on an unusual play like this it helps to add the color that the ball bounced out of Tapia’s glove, which I have no code for, or exactly what Turner was doing on the basepaths.

The game saw German Marquez constantly in trouble; he only allowed one run (although it should have at least been two minus the confusion described above), but gave up six hits and six walks stranding two runners in each of his four innings. The Dodgers hade more luck converting baserunners to runs off the Rockies bullpen, getting four runs over five innings while stranding six, but it wasn’t enough. To add insult to injury, the last big LOB inning came in the ninth where they loaded the bases against Daniel Bard with one out (tying runs on base), but Matt Beaty struck out and the game ended on Mookie Betts’ looping liner to second. The only inning the Dodgers did not strand a runner was the sixth and a baserunner was wiped out by a double play in that frame.

Meanwhile, the Rockies put up four two-run innings, the first three spoiling Clayton Kershaw’s afternoon. Chris Owings had a big day for the Rockies, going 3-3 with a triple, walk, two steals, three runs scored, and a RBI. 

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